Armstrong v. Risteau's Lessee

5 Md. 256
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 5 Md. 256 (Armstrong v. Risteau's Lessee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Risteau's Lessee, 5 Md. 256 (Md. 1853).

Opinion

Tuck, J.,

delivered the opinion of ¡his court.

The appellee sued the appellant for the recovery of part of a tract of land called “Darnallsylvania.” At one lime this whole tract belonged to Hercules Courtenay, who was the father of the appellee’s wife, and who, in the year 1807, sold three hundred and thirty-one acres thereof to Daniel Chambers, under whom the appellant claims, by a devise to his son, Harry W. Chambers, and subsequent conveyances.

At the trial below, the appellee offered the will of Hercules Courtenay and other documentary evidence, from which it appears that he. devised his “dwelling plantation, consisting of parts of Good Hope,Gray’s Inspection and ‘Darnallsylvania,’ ” to his wife for life, and at her death to his son, John S. Courtenay. In 1820 the latter conveyed his interest to his mother, who, by her will, dated in 1824, and provecí in 1S26, directed the lands to be sold and the proceeds to be divided between her said son and Mrs. Risteau. It does not appear that any sale was made under the will, nor in what manner J. S. Courtenay became sole owner of the dwelling plantation of his father; but in 1827 he devised it to Mrs. Risteau and her infant son, and to the survivor, and the heirs and assigns of such survivor. The land in controversy is not mentioned in any of these instruments offered on the part of (he appellee. It does not appear that Mrs. Risteau was the owner of the whole of her father’s estate at the time this action was commenced.

The plaintiff proved various acts of ownership on the part of H. Courtenay, his widow and himself, by cutting wood, timber and rails, for thirty or forty years before the trial; and that certain fences on the north and east of the land in dispute were standing at the time of the trial, where they were forty years before, which were considered the division fences between these farms; that Chambers, the elder, had several times said that the land in dispute belonged to Mr. Courtenay, and that about the year 1832, H. W. Chambers, from whom the defendant.purchased, and the appellee had planted a stone at [269]*269the beginning of one of the lines, located by the appellee, as a dividing line between them. There is no proof of possession by John S. Courtenay, nor of the circumstances and manner of the appellee’s taking possession of the disputed land. It is wood-land and has fences on three sides, but has none on the south; on that side it adjoins wood-land of the Courtenay estate in possession of the appellee, but this is not entirely enclosed, being open on the line between it and the lands of Ridgely’s heirs. The locus in quo, part of the Courtenay estate, and Ridgely’s land, constitute a considerable body of land, uncultivated and not enclosed, and have so remained for many years. A road passes through the land from the south to the north, leading into Armstrong’s possessions through a gate in the fence, laid down by the appellee as the dividing line between the parties. By whom this gate was put there does not appear, but the witnesses speak of it as Armstrong’s gate.

On the part of the defendant below it was proved, that Courtenay sold and conveyed to Chambers, the elder, in 1807, three hundred and thirty-one acres, which are included in the deed to the appellant, the lines of which embrace the lot in controversy, if located according to bis pretensions. He also proved that he and those under whom he claims have, from the time of Daniel Chambers, the grantee of Courtenay, resided on, occupied, used and cultivated, ail the land within the limits of the defendant’s deed, except that portion thereof which is claimed by the plaintiff.

After having been in the possession of the appellee, and of those under whom he claims, adversely for more than twenty years, as he alleges, the appellant obtained possession by extending his fences according to the lines of his deed, as he claims they should be located. Various locations were made, most of which are disputed by counter-locations, but the explanations of the surveyor show that the parties agree as to the beginning, and first and second lines of the whole tract of ‘‘Darnallsyl vania.”

No question arises on paper title. The prayers of the appellee rest his right to recover on adverse possession by him[270]*270self and those under whom he claims. And two propositions have been relied on by the appellee’s counsel, which are supposed to embrace the points chiefly in controversy. These are: First. That twenty years adverse possession will enable a plaintiff to maintain ejectment against a defendant having the paper title, who has ousted the plaintiff. Second. That the plaintiff below has proved such a possession as entitles him to recover in this action.

If the first of these propositions were to be settled according to the English authorities alone, we suppose that its correctness could scarcely be questioned. More than a century and a half ago it was decided by Lord Holt, that “if A has possession of land for more than twenty years uninterrupted, and -then B gains possession, upon which A brings ejectment, though A is plaintiff, yet his possession for twenty years will be a good title for him as well as if A had then been in possession, because possession for twenty years, by virtue of the statute of James 1, ch. 16, is like a descent at common law, which tolls the entry.” Stocker vs. Berny, 1 Lord Raymond, 741, (reported in 2 Salk., 421, as Stokes vs. Berry.) The same principle is stated in Buller's N. P., 103, and the reason assigned, “that by the statute, twenty years possession tolls the entry of the person having right, and consequently, though the very right be in the defendant, yet he cannot justify his ejecting the plaintiff.”

In Taylor vs. Horde, 1 Burr., 60, Lord Mansfield, in speaking of adverse possession by a defendant in ejectment, said: ‘‘Twenty years adverse possession is a positive title in the defendant; it is not a bar to the action or remedy of the plaintiff only, but it takes away his right of possession.” And subsequently, in the case of Denn vs. Barnard, Cowper, 597, this eminent jurist applied the same doctrine where the plaintiff in ejectment was relying on a title by possession alone. See also Barwick vs. Thompson, 7 Term Rep., 492.

The counsel for the appellant, however, contend that this doctrine does not prevail against a defendant holding the legal title, and they rely on 2 Archbold N. P., 318, (50 Law Lib., 308,) where it is said, “if a party against whom the twenty years have run obtain quiet possession of the land, he [271]*271is then in as of his old right, and may set up his right and title as a defence to any ejectment that may be brought against him, in the same manner as if he had never been out of possession,” for which the author cites Doe vs. Reade, 8 East, 353. That case does not sustain this position. There the plaintiff never had had any possession of the premises. She set up a claim under a former possessor, between whom and herself there was no privity. The defendant, with title, had entered into a vacant possession on the death of the last occupant. “The court all agreed, that the defendant being lawfully in possession might defend himself upon his title, though twenty years had run against him before he took possession, such possession not being the possession of the lessor of the plaintiff.”

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Bluebook (online)
5 Md. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-risteaus-lessee-md-1853.